Have you ever looked at a complex problem and wished you could just plug it into a computer to find the "correct" version of next year? This paper by Elke Seefried takes us back to the mid-20th century, a time when scientists and politicians believed they could do exactly that [1, 2]. It explores the emergence of modern futures research—a field born from the high-stakes world of Cold War military planning and the new "meta-science" of cybernetics [3, 4]. Seefried dives into a period known as the high time of political planning, where there was a palpable "euphoria of steering": the belief that society could be rationalized, simulated, and perfectly guided toward progress [1, 5]. The research focuses on how this dream played out in West Germany and the United States, tracking the friction between different ways of seeing the future [1, 6]. We meet the data-driven modelers at the RAND Corporation, the philosophical "artists" of anticipation, and the social activists who wanted to put the future back into the hands of the people [4, 7-9]. Ultimately, the paper provides a sobering look at why this era of techno-optimism hit a wall in the 1970s, as the messy reality of social and political life proved too complex for even the most advanced simulations of the time [10, 11]. • The field’s core methods—like systems analysis and the Delphi method—were imported directly from military operations and Cold War think tanks into civil government [4]. • Foresight was divided into three distinct traditions: empirical-positivists focusing on data, normative thinkers seeking the "good" life, and emancipators advocating for public participation [8, 9, 12]. • The concept of "feasibility thinking" (Machbarkeitsdenken) dominated the 1960s, treating social problems as engineering challenges to be solved [5, 13, 14]. • The collapse of this steering euphoria in the early 1970s paved the way for the more pragmatic, human-centered, and ecological foresight practices we recognize today [11, 15]. Tune in to explore the rise and fall of the dream of a perfectly steered future. Ref: Elke Seefried. Steering the future. The emergence of “Western” futures research and its production of expertise, 1950s to early 1970s. European Journal of Futures Research, 15, 2014, 29. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40309-013-0029-y